solvejskovlund
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While I was rolling out a shielded cable, a though came to my mind - what happens to the current flow in the cable if there came a short between the wire and the shield in both ends of the cable?
For simplicity, lets assume a 1-wire copper wire wrapped in an aluminum shield. The wire and the shield has the same cross section area. There are insulating material between them, and in both ends there is a short between them.
My first thought, the total resistance of the cable would be reduced. Seeing the copperwire as an resistor, adding the shield is like connecting two resistors in parallel. Despite having the same cross section area, the aluminum has higher resistance, so the total resistance would go down, but not very much.
My next thought was about the skin effect. Remembering that electrons like to travel along the outer edge of a wire. Now that they have the ability to chose a path with a even more outer edge would that make them prefer the aluminum path of the inner copper? If so, would they actually chose the path of HIGHER resistance? Could there be some conditions where the total resistance of the cable actually increases when the shield is included?
Maybe the behavior is dependent of if the current is DC or high frequency AC?
Could someone shed some light on this?
For simplicity, lets assume a 1-wire copper wire wrapped in an aluminum shield. The wire and the shield has the same cross section area. There are insulating material between them, and in both ends there is a short between them.
My first thought, the total resistance of the cable would be reduced. Seeing the copperwire as an resistor, adding the shield is like connecting two resistors in parallel. Despite having the same cross section area, the aluminum has higher resistance, so the total resistance would go down, but not very much.
My next thought was about the skin effect. Remembering that electrons like to travel along the outer edge of a wire. Now that they have the ability to chose a path with a even more outer edge would that make them prefer the aluminum path of the inner copper? If so, would they actually chose the path of HIGHER resistance? Could there be some conditions where the total resistance of the cable actually increases when the shield is included?
Maybe the behavior is dependent of if the current is DC or high frequency AC?
Could someone shed some light on this?